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Posts Tagged ‘creativity’

Funny is good.

Minnesota Intrnative Marketing Association (MIMA) will explore creative brainstorming at its annual conference.

Minnesota Interactive Marketing Association (MIMA) explores brainstorming at its upcoming conference.

Creative brainstorming is a part of what our company does. Oh, it’s not as big a part as interns and other neophytes hope, as evidenced by our laughter when a bright-eyed young interviewee offers, “I can give you great ideas.” (Actually, we were hoping she or he was a whiz with the postage meter, or perhaps calling to collect late payments.)
But, back to the point. Creative brainstorming is crucial, particularly in cases in which the soul of outreach is ear-catching words, innovative graphics, or some virtually unheard-of new interactive approach.

Getting there is fun. Humor and offbeat ideas are a surprising route to the really, really, great idea. Say we’re marketing a new macho product and need a name for it. Generally, someone in our “creative brain trust” ends up laughing so hard his or her stomach hurts, shouting out ridiculousness such as “buzzcut!” or “dude!” until finally, 5,761 completely unusable ideas inspire The Answer.

Our work is serious. Really. But when we want to get to that part of the brain that yields wonderful, original concepts, we need to unleash childlike abandon.

Nice work if you can get it, eh?

What’s the inspiration here?

I’ve become convinced that the world is spinning into a new era. We’re not fussing about “sustainability” and the environment for nothing. Our kids will need incredible skills, not just an education, to get the careers they’ll need if they want to live in a house, drive a car and savor the occasional Ben & Jerry’s pint. And we don’t even need to mention oil prices. Or the roller coaster stock market. Or the U.S. mortgage crisis.

But I don’t feel dismal. Not at all. I’m an optimist, so I’m exploring the boundless potential of creative, out-of-the-box thinking to change – well, anything.

My conclusion is this: conventional thinking isn’t going to cut it for long. Not for leaders or intellectuals or business people or parents, or…

May I suggest a great movie about creative thinking and quantum physics? (don’t be scared; if you know less about physics than I do, I’d be amazed): www.whatthebleep.com